Author
Topic: Straggler Bee Question (Read 428 times)

We had a bee removal person come to our house about two weeks ago. He removed some bees from the exterior wall of our house. He left with a big bucket of bees, so I assume he got the queen. He said there would be straggler bees, and he would come to pick them up if we called. There are still at least 30 - 50 buzzing around in the area where the nest was removed. Unfortunately he is not returning our requests for additional help. Is it possible for the leftover bees to last this long? Not sure if he didnt do a complete job or if new bees moved in. Do you suggest I have someone else come in or wait a bit more.

I disagree. 30-50 bees are stragglers. He did a good job. Just spray the stragglers or wait a few more days. They may just be bees from a neighboring hive cleaning up the dropped honey. If a new swarm had come in, there would be thousands.

Logged

"Listen to the mustn'ts, child. Listen to the don'ts. Listen to the shouldn'ts, the impossibles, the won'ts. Listen to the never haves, then listen close to me . . . Anything can happen, child. Anything can be"

I tend to agree with Iddee. There could have been that many that stayed out all night or was just foraging when the colony was removed. As long as the entrance was sealed properly the bees can't get in.

What Iddee said.I moved my hives 2 weeks ago and the stragglers moved into a swarm trap. There were so many of them that they started adding honey to the drawn frame. They covered a third of it. There was no brood in there so I added a frame of bees and eggs on Sunday to let them build their own. Yesterday I got a call and picked up 2 swarms so I added the smaller one to this box to really give them a boost start.Jim

Logged

"If you don't read the newspaper you are uninformed. If you do read the newspaper you are misinformed."--Mark Twain